Cisco Cisco WAP571E Wireless-AC N Premium Dual Radio Outdoor Access Point Manual De Mantenimiento

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Client Quality of Service
Class Map
Cisco Small Business WAP551 and WAP561 Wireless-N Access Point
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Destination MAC Address—Select this field and enter the destination MAC address to 
compare against an Ethernet frame.
Destination MAC Mask—Enter the destination MAC address mask to specify which 
bits in the destination MAC to compare against an Ethernet frame. 
For each bit position in the MAC mask, a 0 indicates that the corresponding address bit 
is significant and a 1 indicates that the address bit is ignored. For example, to check only 
the first four octets of a MAC address, a MAC mask of 00:00:00:00:ff:ff is used. A 
MAC mask of 00:00:00:00:00:00 checks all address bits and is used to match a single 
MAC address. 
VLAN ID—Select this field and enter the specific VLAN ID to compare against an 
Ethernet frame. 
This field is located in the first/only 802.1Q VLAN tag.
STEP  5
Click Save. The changes are saved to the Startup Configuration.
NOTE
To delete an ACL, ensure that it is selected in the ACL Name-ACL Type list, select Delete ACL, 
and click Save.
Class Map
The Client QoS feature contains Differentiated Services (DiffServ) support that allows traffic 
to be classified into streams and given a certain QoS treatment in accordance with defined per-
hop behaviors.
Standard IP-based networks are designed to provide best-effort data delivery service. Best-
effort service implies that the network delivers the data in a timely fashion, although there is 
no guarantee that it will. During times of congestion, packets may be delayed, sent 
sporadically, or dropped. For typical Internet applications, such as email and file transfer, a 
slight degradation in service is acceptable and in many cases unnoticeable. However, on 
applications with strict timing requirements, such as voice or multimedia, any degradation of 
service has undesirable effects.
A DiffServ configuration begins with defining class maps, which classify traffic according to 
their IP protocol and other criteria. Each class map can then be associated with a policy map, 
which defines how to handle the traffic class. Classes that include time-sensitive traffic can be 
assigned to policy maps that give precedence over other traffic.
You can use the Class Map page to define classes of traffic. Use the Policy Map page to define 
policies and associate class maps to them.